Liam Neeson says he doesn't like watching or filming sex scenes: 'I just get embarrassed'

Liam Neeson admitted that he is still uncomfortable with filming sex scenes despite shooting many over his decades-long career.

During an interview with Vanity Fair, the 70-year-old actor shared his thoughts on “You” star Penn Badgley’s recent revelation that he requested to film fewer intimate scenes for the fourth season of his hit Netflix psychological thriller series.

“Yeah, I absolutely agree and support him,”  the “Taken” star told the outlet. “I don’t like to do them.”

Liam Neeson admitted that he doesn't like to film sex scenes.

Liam Neeson admitted that he doesn’t like to film sex scenes. (Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty Images)

He continued, “I’ve done quite a few of sex scenes and I would have preferred to leave it to the imagination, especially for ladies, the actresses.”

LIAM NEESON SAYS HE’S PLANNING TO RETIRE FROM ACTION MOVIES SOON

Neeson also acknowledged that he doesn’t enjoy watching sex scenes in movies or television series. 

“I’ll be honest, when I see a sex scene, I just can’t look at them. I just get embarrassed,” he said.

The Ireland native added, “I know they are choreographed and stuff, but I don’t need to see that.”

Badgley recently made headlines when he revealed on his “Popcrushed” podcast that he discussed his wish to no longer film intimate scenes with “You” creator Sera Gamble ahead of the show’s fourth season.

The “Gossip Girl” alum said he specifically asked Gamble, “Can I just do no more intimacy scenes?” He added that ideally there would be “zero” of those moments in the show.

The actor cited the importance he placed on “fidelity” in his marriage as a reason he felt uncomfortable with on-screen intimacy. Badgley married actress Jemima Kirke, 37, in 2017, and they share son James, 2. 

Neeson showed support for "You" star Penn Badgley after he spoke out against filming sex scenes.

Neeson showed support for “You” star Penn Badgley after he spoke out against filming sex scenes. (Photo by Jenny Anderson/Getty Images)

In “You,” Badgley plays Joe Goldberg, a charming, dangerous man who becomes obsessed with his romantic targets and takes extreme measures to insert himself into their lives. Over its three previous seasons, the series had become known for its steamy scenes, many of which feature Badgley.

Badgley acknowledged on the podcast that sex is an important aspect of “You” and he didn’t expect it would be removed entirely.

“You can’t take this aspect out of the DNA of the concept, so ‘How much less can you make it?’ was my question to them,” he explained.

The Maryland native shared that he was surprised by Gamble’s supportive reaction to his request.

‘YOU’ ACTOR PENN BADGLEY REQUESTS FEWER SEX SCENES ON NETFLIX SHOW

“She didn’t even bat an eye,” he recalled. “She was really glad that I was that honest, and she was sort of almost empowered. She had a really positive response, she appreciated my directness … and that I was being reasonable and practical … they came back with a phenomenal reduction.”

Earlier this week, Badgley expounded on his view of sex scenes in an interview with Variety. He told that the outlet that he finds them “disturbing” to film.

“It’s not a place where I’ve blurred lines,” Badgley said. “There’s almost nothing I could say with more consecration. That aspect of Hollywood has always been very disturbing to me — and that aspect of the job, that mercurial boundary — has always been something that I actually don’t want to play with at all.”

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Neeson recently hit a major career milestone with the release of his 100th movie, "Marlowe."

Neeson recently hit a major career milestone with the release of his 100th movie, “Marlowe.” (Thomas Niedermueller/Getty Images for ZFF))

He stressed, “It’s important to me in my real life to not have them.” When asked for clarification he responded, “My fidelity in my relationship. It’s important to me. And actually, it was one of the reasons that I initially wanted to turn the role down. I didn’t tell anybody that. But that is why.”

During his interview with Vanity Fair, Neeson also reflected on marking a major career milestone with the release of his 100th movie. The actor portrayed private detective Philip Marlowe in the neo-noir crime thriller “Marlowe,” which debuted in theaters on Feb 15.

“Honestly, I feel old and incredibly lucky,” Neeson said. 

“I’ve been lucky,” he added. “I never forget that. I also know I created my own luck too.”

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Fox News Digital’s Stephanie Giang-Paunon contributed to this report.

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US conducts helicopter raid in Syria capturing ISIS official



CNN
 — 

The US military and Syrian Democratic Forces conducted a helicopter raid in eastern Syria early Saturday, capturing an ISIS official, according to a statement from US Central Command.

Batar, “an ISIS Syria Province Official involved in planning attacks on SDF-guarded detention centers and manufacturing improvised explosive devices,” was captured in the raid, CENTCOM said in the statement.

The US did not provide any additional information or evidence regarding its claims about Batar.

No civilians, SDF or US forces were killed or injured in the raid, according to CENTCOM.

The development comes on the heels of an earlier helicopter raid in Syria on Thursday night that the US military said killed Hamza al-Homsi, a senior ISIS leader, as well as wounded four US troops and a working dog.

Officials told CNN that US forces were “close to” al-Homsi when an explosion occurred, killing al-Homsi and wounding the US service members. It is unclear at this point if the explosion was the result of a suicide vest, a booby trap or something else, two officials said.

Separately, US Central Command said in a statement Saturday evening that two rockets had landed near a coalition base in northeast Syria.

No US or coalition troops were injured and no damage to equipment or infrastructure occurred during the rocket attack that targeted Green Village, a coalition base in northeast Syria.

US forces are investigating the incident.

This story has been updated with additional developments.


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Houston man suffering mental episode struck and killed by 18-wheeler while dancing in the street

Police in Houston, Texas say that a man experiencing a manic episode in the middle of the street is dead after being struck by an 18-wheeler.

Fox 26 Houston reported Saturday that deputies with the Harris County Sheriff’s Office were called to an intersection in northwest Houston around 10 p.m. on Friday night and found an unidentified man dead.

Police believe the man was dancing in the middle of the street when he was struck by a big rig driven by an individual who stopped a short distance later and cooperated with officers.

The outlet reported that poor lighting played a factor in the incident and that the family of the man confirmed he was having mental health issues and had suffered an episode earlier in the day.

TEXAS TRAIN DERAILS IN COLLISION WITH 18-WHEELER, LEAVING DRIVER DEAD

Intersection of Breen and Tabernash Drive where an unidentified man was struck and killed by an 18-wheeler

Intersection of Breen and Tabernash Drive where an unidentified man was struck and killed by an 18-wheeler (Google Earth)

In a statement to Fox News Digital, the Harris County Sheriff’s Office identified the driver as Gabriel Valdez and say he was operating a 2005 Peterbilt truck tractor pulling a flatbed trailer.

“Valdez was traveling eastbound at the 8400 block of Breen Drive,” the statement said. “Eric Becker was standing in the roadway at the 8400 block of Breen Drive. Becker was reported to have been jumping in front of vehicles driving in the area. Valdez struck Becker with his Peterbilt truck tractor in the eastbound traffic lane.”

TEXAS FUNERAL HOME SUED AFTER MAN’S BODY LEFT ‘TO LITERALLY ROT’ FOR DAYS DURING WINTER STORM

Police say Valdez showed no signs of being impaired and was released at the scene.

The incident is currently being investigated by the Harris County Sheriff’s Office and no further details were immediately shared.

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A helicopter hovers above the Houston skyline as sunlight breaks through storm clouds 

A helicopter hovers above the Houston skyline as sunlight breaks through storm clouds  (Reuters/Adrees Latif)

The incident comes just a few months after a man in Houston, Texas was filmed dancing on the top of an 18-wheeler moving down the highway before being killed when he was knocked off the truck by a freeway overpass.

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Opinion: A 'slam dunk' bill to prevent a repeat of an ugly chapter of American history

Editor’s Note: Lynda Lin Grigsby is a journalist and editor who has written for a number of national news outlets. She is a former editor of the Pacific Citizen, a national Asian American newspaper. The views expressed here are her own. Read more opinion at CNN.



CNN
 — 

February 19, 1942 changed everything for Japanese Americans.

The curves and flourishes of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s signature that day on Executive Order 9066 precipitated the forced removal and incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II, sealing the fate of over 125,000 people. Their mass incarceration, often referred to as one of our nation’s most shameful chapters, is remembered every February 19th as the “Day of Remembrance.”

Lynda Lin Grigsby

In the aftermath of the Pearl Harbor attack, Americans of Japanese ancestry were singled out in bold, all-cap font, and ordered to leave their homes and businesses on the West Coast under the pretext of national security. Entire families were incarcerated in horse stalls at racetracks and austere government-run barracks behind barbed wire fences, held as human collateral of wartime hysteria.

This year, on the 81st anniversary of the signing of Executive Order 9066, Japanese American community groups will mark the Day of Remembrance with somber events, and politicians will issue statements filled with aphorisms about how learning about the painful parts of our history can prevent us from repeating it.

That’s all great, but perhaps not nearly enough.

Remembrance is an important foundation to understanding, but its limitation is outlined in its name. The act of remembering keeps us rooted in the past and could foster a belief that events like these could only happen in the black-and-white photographs.

But the same legal framework used to justify the WWII incarceration of Japanese Americans still exists today, so it can happen again to any group of people. The Non-Detention Act of 1971 prohibits the military detention of US citizens, except by an act of Congress. Presumably, this was a step forward from 1942 when the decision was made solely by the president, but the power of our federal government to order the military to detain American citizens en masse remains authorized by an existing law.

Japanese-American internees wave to friends departing by train from the Santa Anita Assembly Center in Arcadia, California in 1942.

So, on a day set aside to remember the plight of Japanese Americans during WWII, how do we meaningfully acknowledge what happened and ensure that something like this does not happen again? The answer may lie in a bill that has failed to pass since 2017.

The Korematsu-Takai Civil Liberties Protection Act, would establish clear legal prohibition against incarcerating Americans based not only on race, religion, and nationality but also sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, ethnicity or disability. The bill seems like a slam dunk – a way to speak truth to power when we say, “Never again.”

The bill is named after Fred Korematsu, a civil rights icon who challenged the constitutionality of the mass incarceration all the way to the Supreme Court, and Rep. Mark Takai of Hawaii. Both men have died since the measure was first introduced.

It takes the lessons of this historic event and extends it to protect additional marginalized groups. Isn’t that what it means to prevent history from repeating itself? To repair our country’s wounds, we must go beyond remembrance and take meaningful action with the lessons of the past.

“It’s a more forward-looking commitment,” Eric Muller, a law professor at the University of North Carolina, told me when we discussed the legislation recently. “It’s an opportunity to take this tragic historical example and have it be something more than just a tragic historical example. We could have it be something that actually leads to a more just world for current and future generations.”

A group of Japanese American high school student say the Pledge of Allegiance before their graduation ceremony. Shortly afterwards, they will be sent to a relocation camp. Santa Anita, California, June 1942.

This is a sentiment that I hear often from survivors and descendants of the WWII camps. For years, I bore witness to their stories as an editor of a national Asian American newspaper. The internalized message of the government’s action against the Issei and Nisei (first- and second-generation Japanese Americans) sublimated trauma.

Often, the effects of the mass incarceration quietly span over generations, bubbling to the surface in fits of tears, anger, or resolve in the grown children and grandchildren of the camps.

In 1942, Yetsuko Saguchi and her twin sister Kaz Tanaka were 3 years old when their family was forced by government order to abandon their farm and home in Artesia, California. When Japanese Americans were instructed to bring only what they could carry, their mother, Shizuko Hamamoto, only carried belongings for her daughters. First, they lived in the horse stalls at the Santa Anita racetrack, and then in the skeletal barracks in Rohwer, Arkansas.

“I’m not bitter,” Saguchi, 83, told me recently during an interview. “This happened, but my concern is that it never happens to another group.”

She has good reason to worry: In the days after the September 11, 2001 attacks, US government officials rounded up South Asian and Arab men for questionable detention. In this news, Saguchi heard echoes of her past, so she started talking about her family history to anyone who would listen. “It’s unjust, and it’s just wrong,” said Saguchi. “You can’t treat your fellow humans that way.”

For this reason, the Korematsu-Takai bill should be a no-brainer, because it is based on a historic event that many agree was unjust. After the passage of the Civil Liberties Act in 1988, the US government officially apologized and paid reparations for its wartime actions against Japanese Americans.

The need for our leaders to prevent future mass detentions based on race and other marginalized identities is one of the imperative lessons of our past. The bill’s passage seems far more meaningful than symbolic gestures or commemorative events. Instead of just saying we should learn from our history, we can turn words into action. But we must ask ourselves first if we are ready to look forward.

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Mac McClung wins NBA Slam Dunk Contest with viral finishes

Mac McClung has played in just two NBA games, but he’s now one of the most popular basketball players on the planet.

The 24-year-old grew fame way back in high school for his insane hops, and he showed them off – and some – to win the 2023 NBA Slam Dunk Contest.

He scored 999 points out of a possible 1,000.

McClung signed a two-way contract with the Philadelphia 76ers earlier this week to participate, and he did not disappoint.

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Mac McClung #9 of the Philadelphia 76ers dunks the ball during the AT&T Slam Dunk Contest as part of 2023 NBA All Star Weekend on Saturday, February 18, 2023 at Vivint Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Mac McClung #9 of the Philadelphia 76ers dunks the ball during the AT&T Slam Dunk Contest as part of 2023 NBA All Star Weekend on Saturday, February 18, 2023 at Vivint Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah. (Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images)

On his first dunk, he jumped over two people, tapped the ball with the backboard, and finished with a behind-the-head two-handed slam.

That was just a preview of what was to follow. His second dunk was a two-handed 360 reverse windmill. Read that again (this was the dunk that somehow got a 49).

Those two dunks put him in the finals against Trey Murphy III, and it was quite frankly no contest.

On his first dunk of the championship round, he did a double-pump.

To clinch the win, he channeled his inner Tony Hawk and pulled off a 540 while rocking his high school jersey.

McClung played one game with the Chicago Bulls and another with the Los Angeles Lakers – he spent his college days at both Georgetown and Texas Tech.

Mac McClung #9 of the Philadelphia 76ers celebrates during the AT&T Slam Dunk Contest as part of 2023 NBA All Star Weekend on Saturday, February 18, 2023 at Vivint Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah. 

Mac McClung #9 of the Philadelphia 76ers celebrates during the AT&T Slam Dunk Contest as part of 2023 NBA All Star Weekend on Saturday, February 18, 2023 at Vivint Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah.  (Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images)

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Who knows if this will garner some legitimate playing time with the Sixers, but can you blame anyone for buying tickets just to see him dunk in pregame warmups?

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Twitter to charge for SMS two-factor authentication


New York
CNN
 — 

Twitter Blue subscribers will be the platform’s only users able to use text messages as a two-factor authentication method, Twitter announced Friday.

The change will take place on March 20. Twitter users will have two other ways to authenticate their Twitter log-ins at no cost: an authentication mobile app and a security key.

Two factor authentication, or 2FA, requires users to type in their password and then enter a code or security key to access their accounts. It is one of the primary methods for users to keep their Twitter account secure.

“While historically a popular form of 2FA, unfortunately we have seen phone-number based 2FA be used – and abused – by bad actors,” the company said in a blog post Friday. “So starting today, we will no longer allow accounts to enroll in the text message/SMS method of 2FA unless they are Twitter Blue subscribers.”

Twitter Blue, which costs $11 a month for iOS and Android subscribers, adds a blue checkmark to the account of anyone willing to pay for one.

As of 2021, only 2.6% of Twitter users had a 2FA method enabled – and of those, 74.4% used SMS authentication, a Twitter account security report said.

Twitter said non-subscribers will have 30 days to disable the text method and enroll in another way to sign in using 2FA. Disabling text message 2FA won’t automatically disassociate the user’s phone number from their account, Twitter said.

Musk responded “Yup” to a tweet claiming a telecommunications company used bot accounts “to Pump 2FA SMS” and that Twitter was losing $60 million a year “on scam SMS.”


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Measuring telomeres could reveal how fast you’re aging

A new way to measure the length of a single telomere could provide information on how rapidly we are aging and what we need to do to slow it down.

Telomeres—the caps at the ends of chromosomes that protect our genetic materials from the brunt of cellular wear and tear—are known to shorten and fray over time. Lifestyle, diet, and stress can exacerbate this process, leading to early loss of telomere protection and increasing the chances of early aging and lifestyle diseases, such as cancer and heart diseases.

To date, approaches for measuring biological aging based on telomere length have been limited as they can only ascertain average telomere lengths within a pool of DNA fragments, or are time-consuming and require highly-skilled specialists.

Being able to accurately and efficiently measure the length of an individual’s telomeres could open the doors to developing lifestyle interventions that slow aging and prevent disease.

“We applied a novel approach that uses DNA sequences—we call them ‘telobaits’—to latch onto the ends of telomeres in large pools of DNA fragments, like fishing in pond. Then, with specific scissor-like enzymes, we snip the telomeres out of the pools,” says Li Shang, associate professor with the Duke-NUS Cancer & Stem Cell Biology Programme and senior author of the study in Nature Communications.

“Using high-throughput genetic sequencing technology, we were able to read the DNA ‘letters’ that comprised each individual telomere, allowing us to very precisely measure their lengths.”

The team successfully validated this approach when they tested it using human cell lines and patient cells. Interestingly, the sequencing results revealed that the genetic sequences within certain parts of the telomeres, known as telomeric variant sequences, were distinct to each individual person.

“Based on this insight, a future area of study for us is the possible use of telomeric variant sequences as a means of biological identification, which could potentially prove useful for expanding the field of forensic science,” Li says.

The team believes this new approach could be used as a predictive biomarker for human aging and disease at the individual level, as well as for population-level studies on the impacts of lifestyle, diet, and the environment on human health.

“This method for telomere length measurement is an important advance in the field of aging research,” says senior coauthor Angela Koh, associate professor who is senior consultant with the department of cardiology at NHCS and associate professor with the SingHealth Duke-NUS Cardiovascular Sciences Academic Clinical Programme.

“From the clinical perspective, we view this as a very promising method for understanding clinical diseases associated with aging such as cardiovascular disease. Our partnership signifies what can be achieved by clinician-and-biomedical scientists to bring complex lab methods towards simpler, quantifiable methods that may be used in broader clinical labs in the future.”

Additional coauthors are from the Cancer Science Institute of Singapore; the National University of Singapore; A*STAR’s Genome Institute of Singapore and Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology; National Cancer Centre Singapore; Singapore General Hospital; the SingHealth Duke-NUS Institute of Precision Medicine; Kumamoto University (Japan); Guangzhou Medical University (China); the Chinese University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen (China); Shanghai University (China); and the University of California, Davis.

Source: Duke-NUS

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New Chick-fil-A cauliflower sandwich sparks debate on TikTok: 'Literally a veggie and bread. Why is it $7?'

TikTok launched into a frenzy after Chick-Fil-A dropped its new “plant-forward” menu option, the “Chick-fil-A Cauliflower sandwich.” 

The new plant-based sandwich is priced at $6.59, and is currently being tested in Colorado, South Carolina and North Carolina after its premiere on Monday, according to Chick-fil-A’s website. 

But the sandwich has sparked debate on TikTok, with some food influencers trying out the meal for fans. 

CHICK-FIL-A’S ‘CAULIFLOWER FILET’ SMACKS OF FOWL PLAY. WHO NEEDS A ‘PLANT FORWARD’ SANDWICH?

"It honestly looks like a normal chicken sandwich, but it does have that cauliflower smell," the influencer told her followers. 

“It honestly looks like a normal chicken sandwich, but it does have that cauliflower smell,” the influencer told her followers.  (Screenshot / @morganchompz (TikTok user))

One TikToker, @morganchompz, reviewed the sandwich in a video on Tuesday that went viral with over 1.7 million views. 

“It honestly looks like a normal chicken sandwich, but it does have that cauliflower smell,” the influencer told her followers. 

Her final verdict was that the sandwich mostly tasted like a “filet of breading.” 

Another TikTok user also tried the cauliflower sandwich, but gave it a “10/10” and said that it looked and tasted like the original sandwich.

The hashtag for Chick-fil-A’s cauliflower sandwich has amassed over 416 million views on the platform.

A CHICK-FIL-A IN CALIFORNIA MAY BE DECLARED ‘A PUBLIC NUISANCE,’ CITY COUNCIL PLANS VOTE

A Chick-fil-A spokesperson defended the cauliflower sandwich in a statement to Fox News Digital. 

“The Chick-fil-A Cauliflower Sandwich is a competitively priced plant-forward offering that features high-quality ingredients, including a whole cauliflower filet that is hand-breaded, prepared and cooked throughout the day.”

The spokesperson also acknowledged that customer feedback is important to Chick-fil-A menu options. 

“Guest input plays a key role in determining the future of test market menu offerings. We welcome and appreciate feedback on all menu tests, including the Chick-fil-A Cauliflower Sandwich.”

“We’re excited for our guests to try it!” the spokesperson said. 

Another TikTok user also tried the cauliflower sandwich (not pictured), but gave it a "10/10" and said that it looked and tasted like the original sandwich.

Another TikTok user also tried the cauliflower sandwich (not pictured), but gave it a “10/10” and said that it looked and tasted like the original sandwich. (Chick-fil-A)

BRITISH ANIMAL RIGHTS ACTIVISTS PROTEST AT LONDON STEAKHOUSE OWNED BY ‘SALT BAE’

But some users were less pleased with the price. 

“For $7 I want the whole d— chicken forget the cauliflower,” one user wrote.

Another agreed, writing, “How is a cauliflower more expensive [than] a chicken.”

“It’s literally a veggie and bread why is it $7,” a third user wrote, adding a disappointed face emoji.

WAFFLE HOUSE RESTAURANT FIRES BACK AT GEN Z OVER ‘SECRET MENU’ TREND: ‘NOT MAKING ANYTHING YOU SAW ON TIKTOK’

"Let's face it, not everyone likes the Lord's blessed chicken," the Babylon Bee wrote, in a quote jokingly attributed to Chick-fil-A’s menu director Leslie Neslage. 

“Let’s face it, not everyone likes the Lord’s blessed chicken,” the Babylon Bee wrote, in a quote jokingly attributed to Chick-fil-A’s menu director Leslie Neslage.  (Chick-fil-A)

Parody site the Babylon Bee poked fun at Chick-fil-A’s announcement in an article headlined, “Chick-Fil-A Courts Godless Heathen Community With Cauliflower Sandwich.” 

“Let’s face it, not everyone likes the Lord’s blessed chicken,” the Babylon Bee wrote, in a quote jokingly attributed to Chick-fil-A’s Menu Director Leslie Neslage. 

“With this new cauliflower sandwich, we hope to attract a whole new clientele of godless Communist heathens to our restaurant!”

The article added that the sandwich “will be served with a side of waffle cricket fries.”

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